Skip to main content
Tuckered Out —The Shoeshine Boy
Tuckered Out —The Shoeshine Boy

Tuckered Out —The Shoeshine Boy

John George Brown (American (born in England), 1831–1913)
about 1888
Medium/TechniqueOil on canvas
Dimensions61.59 x 40.96 cm (24 1/4 x 16 1/8 in.)
Credit LineBequest of Maxim Karolik
Accession number64.467
On View
Not on view
ClassificationsPaintings
Collections
Description
John George Brown made childhood his primary subject. At first he painted middle-class country children. In the 1870s, he switched to poor city children, who populated urban streets in increasing numbers as immigrant and rural families seeking jobs flocked to the cities. Brown became known for his depiction of bootblacks, the street urchins who made a few pennies by polishing shoes. As in "Tuckered Out-The Shoeshine Boy," he showed them in tattered clothing but clean, well-fed, and healthy. Brown's paintings allowed his patrons (mostly successful businessmen) to disregard the wretched conditions in which these children lived. The artist presented the bootblacks as young entrepreneurs about to begin their rags-to-riches climb in American society.  Paintings like this were the pictorial equivalent of the immensely popular "Ragged Dick" stories, written in the late nineteenth century by New York novelist Horatio Alger.  In Alger's stories, disadvantaged children exhibit pluck and determination that enables them to rise from horrible poverty to wealth and respectability.Born in England, Brown came to New York in 1853, working in a glass factory and painting portraits before turning to genre paintings. He served as vice president of the National Academy of Design, to which he had been elected in 1863. Brown's sentimental images of poor but pretty children earned him many patrons eager to overlook the ravages of urban poverty, and he became a wealthy man.This text was adapted from Carol Troyen and Janet Comey, "Children in American Art" (Nagoya/Boston Museum of Fine Arts, 2007, in Japanese).
InscriptionsLower left: J.G. Brown N.A./Copyright.ProvenanceThe artist; Maxim Karolik, Newport, R.I.; to MFA, 1964, bequest of Maxim Karolik.
Reading on the Rocks, Grand Manan
John George Brown
about 1877
Castello dell'Ovo, Bay of Naples
George Loring Brown
1844
Medford Marshes
George Loring Brown
1862–63
The Public Garden, Boston
George Loring Brown
1869 or after
Monte Pellegrino at Palermo, Italy
George Loring Brown
1856
Early Summer
John Appleton Brown
1890s
Hillside in Summer
John Appleton Brown
1890s
A Showery May Morning
John Appleton Brown
1890s
On the Coast of France
John Appleton Brown
1875
Portrait of a Man
Mather Brown